Repertories of Polyphony between Unmeasured and Measured
in the Late Middle Ages
Michael Scott Cuthbert Music r: Topics in Medieval Polyphony
Prof. Thomas Forrest Kelly Harvard University, Spring May
R e p e r t o r i e s o f P o l y p h o n y b e t w e e n U n m e a s u r e d a n d M e a s u r e d i n t h e L a t e M i d d l e A g e s
Michael Scott Cuthbert
The distinction between high and low vocal style in the fourteenth and early fifteenth
centuries once seemed quite clear. To the former belonged the songs comprising the great codices:
manuscripts, sometimes lavishly decorated, copied long after the music was first composed, and
dedicated to the preservation of these pieces as a repertory. To this largely Italian group were added
sacred pieces of French origin in a similarly refined style, such as the isorhythmic motets and mass of
Guillaume de Machaut—music for connoisseurs and not necessarily or primarily of practical use in
any particular liturgy. Low vocal style was everything else, including monophonic chant, unica songs
in fragmentary sources, sacred polyphony in liturgical manuscripts, and secular monody.
Work conducted in the last four decades has expanded the purview of both sides of this
cultural gap without attempting to eliminate it completely. The reach of low vocal style has been
extended through focused attention on note-against-note unmeasured polyphony,1 studies of the
unwritten tradition of sicilianas in Italy,2 and increased work on the connections between vocalists
and instrumentalists.3 On the other side, much more attention has been paid to the context of
pieces in the high art style which were not fortunate enough to be found in the great song
manuscripts of Tuscany. Studies of manuscript fragments transmitting art music have especially
flourished.4 These examinations have increased our knowledge not only of places and times where
ars nova polyphony was copied but also the variety of notational systems, paleographic styles, and
1 Corsi-Petrobelli, Gallo, Gallo-Vecchi, FischerQ. See bibliography for an explanation of abbreviations. 2 PirrottaN. 3 Howard Mayer Brown, “The trecento harp,” in Studies in the performance of late mediaeval music, edited by
Stanley Boorman (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ). 4 PirrottaC, John Nádas and Agostino Ziino, The Lucca codex (Lucca: Libreria musicale italiana, ),
Agostino Ziino, Il Codice T.III. (Lucca: Libreria musicale italiana, ), Anne Hallmark, “Some Evidence for French Influence in Northern Italy, c. ,” in Studies in the Performance of Late Medieval Music, edited by Stanley Boorman (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ), pp. -.
2
liturgical settings applied to the music. Despite the convergent direction of both branches of
scholarship, the idea of a continuum of musical style, existing from the most simple to the
exceedingly complex, has not appeared in print. The notion that there cannot be a continuous
stream of rhythmic notation or rhythmic performance has been the largest obstacle to such a theory.
Gallo wrote, in his article on cantus planus binatim, “the connections between the two types of
repertory, mensural and non-mensural, are slight.”5 He further argued that, with few exceptions, the
connections were one-directional; mensural polyphony influenced non-mensural.
Margaret Bent, even while distinguishing many different categories of rhythmic and
notational practice, kept a distance between simple and art repertories. She downplayed the “few”
pieces of note-against-note mensural music and the “few modest pieces” of simpler non-homophonic
music, explaining that there is a dividing line which is “in general borne out by manuscript
segregation.”6 Only in one place in her article did she admit to how narrow this line might be:
The already difficult and arbitrary distinction between ‘art’ and ‘primitive’ music is further complicated by what was said above—namely, that to admit the possibility of mensural performance (and, indeed, notation) of the ‘true’ simple repertory further blurs the boundaries between ‘simple’ and ‘simple art’ polyphony. But it would be pointless to quibble here about individual exclusions and inclusions.7
This paper is an examination of that line, the difficult distinction between the simple and the
not-so-simple. In a sense, I want it to be a “pointless quibbling,” as Bent puts it, but not because I
intend to come up with a classification for every individual exclusion. Rather, I want to show that
the musical repertory between cantus planus binatim and the art repertory is not a hodge-podge of a
few isolated exceptions. Instead, this collection of works is formidable and important for our under-
standing of other repertories. I do not want to get rid of the notions of art and simple polyphony,
5 Gallo, p. . 6 BentD, p. . 7 Ibid., p. .
3
which are useful concepts, if only as terminological shorthand for repertories we already know. I
would like to redefine them as ends of a stylistic spectrum with a healthy and understudied center.
The manuscript repertory is likewise large and diverse; my survey goes far beyond the
polyphonic musical centers of Italy and France, into England, Germany, Austria, the Czech
Republic, and Poland, and is continuous from the beginning of the fourteenth to the early sixteenth
century. But the paper mainly focuses on Ital ian sources from c. - because there are many
sources from this time, rivaled in number only by late fifteenth-century German sources, and
because the connections to the art tradition and to binatim, and from there, to plainsong, are so
strong in that period. The mainstream Italian art song tradition referenced by Bent, Gallo, and
many others, is not nearly so overwhelming as might be thought. The four manuscripts which
transmit Trecento secular polyphony nearly exclusively comprise only approximately folios.8
Against this can be set two dozen or so manuscript fragments, many from northern Italy, which
present both secular and sacred ars nova music. If each of these works originally comprised merely a
fascicle or two, then they would have been as common as what we think of as the main song
tradition. We have further evidence that at least several fragments were full codices in their own
right.9
Homophonic Mensural Polyphony
The most numerous of the pieces which blur the boundary between mensural and non-
mensural polyphony are those works which have rhythmically accurate notation but are in a note-
against-note style. These pieces fall into the gap between mensural and non-mensural polyphony for
two reasons. The first is that it is unclear that all musicians needed to know how to read mensural
8 The manuscripts are I-Fn (Pan.), F-Pn (Reina), F-Pn (Pit.), and I-Fl (Squarcialupi). Another
more recent discovery which fits into this category of song anthology is the San Lorenzo palimpsest, I-Fasl.
9 See Agostino Ziino, Il codice T.III., PirrotaC, or my own previous work on the Paduan fragments.
4
music in order to perform these pieces. It is conceivable that singers of some voices, particularly the
lower voices, followed the rhythmic patterning of the upper voices. Evidence for this behavior is
presented in category C, below. Some works in that group show notational problems, especially in
lower voices, which seem to indicate that the singers were not totally dependent on the written
shapes to determine the lengths of note but listened and stayed with the other singers. The
information homophonic mensural works provide about rhythmic practice in unmeasured
homophonic polyphony, such as cantus planus binatim, is the second reason for including these
works in this study and will be discussed below with respect to a specific piece, Nicolay Solemnia.
Homophonic mensural polyphony, like most of the cross-over styles of polyphony discussed
in this paper, has several features in common with binatim and other simpler repertories. The pieces
are almost exclusively anonymous and, until the later German and Eastern European sources, are
primarily sacred works.10 Like the binatim pieces, some works are based on preexisting chant
melodies, but the majority are not. Several of the pieces exist in three voice versions, a feature not
found in the works without rhythmic notation. A non-exclusive list of these pieces, with selected
incipits, follows:11
10 An exception to the principle of anonymity is Gloria in I-CF attributed to “Fr. Antonius de Civitate.” It
may be dangerous speculation to wonder aloud if the attribution appears because this piece is unusual in that it was composed by a local musician. If so, then we might wonder again about whether there are non-local or international origins for the rest of the Cividale repertory.
11 I have only included works in black-notation in this list. Incipits are taken from FischerRISM.
5
A. Non-Modal Homophonic Polyphony
A-Ssp b. Et cum spiritu tuo, Gloria tibi, flyleaf (some syncopation in upper voice) A-Wn . Lieb dein verlangen hat umbfangen, f. r (similar to A-Ssp, b) CS-S . …day nám ku podiwenii kdyz, ff. r, v CS-VB . Huic sit memoria Amen, f. r (quasi-squeezebox polyphony) D-Bs . Phisis stupescit lux convenit, ff. r/v, r (three voices, near homophonic) D-BT . Corde natus ex parentis, f. r/v . Salve virgo speciosa, ff. v, r et passim GB-Lbm . Salve pater lumnium omnium/Exaudi nos mundi dos celi ros, ff. v, r , Adam cum viragine/O Maria celi via virgo pia, ff. v, r (both in ²¼ feel, or
possibly mode ) A-Wn, CS-S:
CS-VB, D-Bs:
D-BT ():
GB-Lbm, (,):
6
GB-OH . Qui tollis peccata mundi, f. r . [P]ax hominibus bone voluntatis, ff. v, r . Et in terra pax hominibus, f. r/v . [Et in terra], f. r I-CF . Fr. Antonius de Civitate, Et in terra pax, ff. Bv, Cr I-PAad . Patrem omnipotentem, ff. A-D . Credo, Patrem, ff. v, r I-Rvat . Credo, Patrem omnipotentem, ff. v, r
GB-OH (-):
I-CF, A-Wn, CH-SGs ():
7
The Salzburg manuscript, A-Ssp, and the Vienna manuscript, A-Wn, both contain two
voice homophonic pieces were the top voice is frequently syncopated by one minim as the voices
approach. There is a tradition of German polyphony which appears homophonic on paper, but
where one voice is syncopated with respect to the other throughout the entire piece, like a fourth-
species counterpoint exercise. Although such works might grow out of the homophonic tradition, I
consider them too much of a departure from this style to include them in this study.12
The Old Hall pieces which are in score notation, ff. r-v, show a progression from almost
total homophony to entirely independent parts. Though the music after the fourth piece is beyond
the purview of this survey, the works as a whole show how the homophonic mensural tradition has
been integrated into the mainline of art polyphony in one English manuscript.
B. Modal Homophonic Polyphony
A-Wn/ . Gezu Kryste smilug se nad ná mi [], ff. v, r; ff. v,r A-Wn CH-GSBh A . Justa vox piis spiritus stetit et ploravit [], pp. - CH-SGs . Resonet in laudibus [], p. (squeezebox polyphony)
. In hoc anni circulo [], p. . Puer nobis nascitur [], p. . Nycolay solempnia [], pp. , (squeezebox polyphony)
CS-OU . Otce wssemohoucího [], ff. v, v D-BT . Nicolai solempnia [], f. v, r I-Fl . Verbum caro factum est [], f. v
A sub-category of homophonic mensural polyphony are those pieces which are entirely within a
single rhythmic mode. The concept of modal rhythm is usually thought to disappear with the 12 The most syncopated work which has been considered for this survey is the Patrem from Cividale Ms. .
which I have classified under category C.
CH-SGs (, ):
8
introduction of Franconian notation, and thus the liberation of the individual note or section of a
ligature, around . There is no reason, however, that changes in musical notation necessarily will
precipitate changes in musical style. The Swiss and Austrian manuscripts, from the mid-fifteenth and
mid-sixteenth centuries respectively, attest to this perseverance of rhythmic style.
A piece notated in modal rhythm has very simple rhythmic information. Thus, it does not
necessarily imply that the performers had knowledge of mensural notation. Justa vox piis spiritus is a
more complex example, however, where the singers needed to know minims and semibreve ligatures
in addition to the usual breve (square) and semibreve (lozenge) note forms. In the preceding list, the
italic number in brackets indicates the rhythmic mode of the piece—[] in all cases except Nicolay
Solemnia which will be discussed below for other reasons.
C. Problematic Homophonic Polyphony
I-CF . Patrem omnipotentem, ff. Bv, Cr I-FOL/I-GR ., . Et in terra, f. Ar/v, ff. v,r I-Sc . Patrem omnipotentem, ff. v, r I-Pc/I-Pc . Quis est iste qui venit de Edom, f. r PL-Kklar . Surrexit Cristus hodie…Benedicamus domino, f. r
The Patrem in Siena Ms. and the Et in terra of the Foligno and Grottaferrata fragments
are mainly homophonic but have an interesting variant in their highest voice. Approaching the first
cadence, the top voice has the rhythm S S M against S S S in the other voices.13 Nino Pirrotta
I-Fl, CH-GsBh A:
I-Sc, I-Pc:
13 The last two notes of the lower voice in c- are a c.o.p. ligature.
9
discussed this phenomenon in the Foligno fragment, where he deduces that the notation of the top
voice applies to all voices in these cases, and that the proper interpretation is þ¾ ±. ± Ä .14 I agree with
Pirrotta’s rhythmic interpretation, while disagreeing with his dating of the work, nearly a century
before the manuscript date. He bases this date entirely on the consistency of the notational style
with the teachings of Marchetto.
The implications of the undifferentiated semibreves in the lower voices is my main concern.
That the indicator of rhythmic mode is found in the top voice suggests that it was the singer of this
voice who could most likely be expected to read mensural notation, and the other singers would
likely follow him during a performance. After the first statement with the semibrevis minima, all
semibreves in the upper part are without tail in the Foligno fragment.15 The number of rhythmic
inaccuracies in that work—Pirrotta counts six before the “Gratias tibi” alone—argue that the
notation was not the most important way the singers knew the work. They began, ended, and
changed notes together despite erroneous notational evidence to the contrary. This interpretation is
not completely without precedent. Many fully mensural pieces of polyphony have rhythmic
discrepancies between parts at and near cadences. One voice might have a breve as its cadence tone
while another has a long and the last a duplex long. Probably all voices attacked and released
together.
14 PirrotaC, pp. -. 15 I did not have access to a facsimile of the Siena manuscript, so I am unable to discuss the notation of the
Patrem after the incipit.
10
Quis est iste qui venit de Edom presents several other problems for mensural interpretation.
The two voice work is transmitted in two nearly identical Paduan processionals. A facsimile of the
work was published in Gallo-Vecchi and in some copies of Vecchi’s edition of the Paduan
manuscripts:
Vecchi provides a very singable transcription of the work, complete with a new second line in place
of the unison ending:16
16 Vecchi, p. .
11
This edition of Quis est iste obscures some of the unusual notational features of the work. The first
note of the lower voice is a breve, which Vecchi has transcribed as a quarter note. The notes in the
second measure are semibreves, which he also transcribed as quarter notes. Later, in m. , a
semibreve caudate is transcribed as a half-note, twice as long as the first breve of the piece. Further,
the ligature on the antepenultimate syllable, “do” in Vecchi’s transcription, appears from his edition
to be an impossible ligature of three longs. The edition by von Fischer and Gallo contains the same
irregularities.17 Their editorial choices might have been the only workable option given the
notational peculiarities of the piece. An edition which is faithful to the hierarchy of brevis and
semibrevis and has the two levels of semibreve required by the caudate, such as the one I have
provided below, yields a work which lurches from slow to very fast notes:
17 Fischer-Gallo, p. . It should be noted that Vecchi, Von Fischer, and Gallo had access to both I-Pc
and I-Pc while my work was conducted on I-Pc alone. However, Von Fischer and Gallo’s critical notes (p. ) suggest that the two manuscripts are in agreement on the points I have outlined above.
12
Perhaps a quasi-mensural interpretation or something closer to free rhythm, as the second
transcription above shows, was intended.
Information about rhythmic practice can be found not only in the mensural and quasi-
mensural pieces in the Paduan processionals, but in the binatim and monophonic works as well. In
Ave gratia plena, two dots have been placed over notes in the upper voice where that voice has one
note against two notes in the lower voice. The double dots seem to be warnings to the singer of that
part that he must wait for the other musician to sing two notes before he can continue. This would
suggest that it is the note which is the constant rather than the syllable, as Vecchi has suggested. If it
were the latter, we would instead expect warning signs to appear in the voice with two notes.
The mostly-monophonic sequence repertory in the same manuscripts argues against this
interpretation. In many of the sequences, a syllable from the first presentation of a melody will
13
receive a single note, while the corresponding syllable in the repeat will have a two-note ligature.
Usually the ligature will comprise the note above the original note followed by the note itself.
Though not inconceivable, it is difficult to imagine that the musical line’s rhythm would be altered
for the second text, since the texts themselves were chosen to have the same accent and syllable
structure. Considering this incongruous evidence, a closer examination of rhythm is these
manuscripts is clearly warranted.
D. Simple Pieces in Score Notation
A-Wn . Du Fay, Ce jour le doibt, f. bisv F-Pn . Landini, Questa fançulla, f. r . Textless piece, f. v
A small category of music exists pieces normally transmitted in mensural notation and with
separate parts, instead written in a simplified score notation. Guillaume Du Fay’s Ce jour le doibt is
an example of such a work. In this version, the lower two voices contain only breves and semibreves
with the occasional semibrevis rest. A line of division appears through and between staves after every
third semibreve, presumably to align parts:
A-Wn, F-Pn ():
14
The layout and simplified notation of this version—coloration in the lower voices is completely
absent—would allow for musicians less skilled at reading mensural notation to perform the work.
The possibility that these pieces, none of which are texted, might be versions for keyboard
instruments cannot be discounted. They are, however, transmitted in the context of pieces definitely
intended to be performed by multiple musicians.18
E. Miscellaneous
A-GÖ . Jube domine consolamini, ff. v, v . In semper o pie, ff. r, r D-BT . Puer nobis nascitur…Benedicamus domino, f. r/v . In natali domini, f. r/v . Gaudent in domino, f. r/v D-WIN . [Jube domne… Primo tempore] caro factum est, f. r
. Jube domne… Maria deo placuit, f. v, r . Jube domne…Cela benenigna, f. v, v F-Pn . Paolo, Benedicamus domino, f. r. GB-Ob . Benedicamus domino, f. v. I-Fl . Paolo, Gaudeamus omnes in domino, ff. v, r PL-Kb . Ave in œwum sanctissima caro, ff. v, r ( voices) . Ave verbum incarnatum , f. v
Three works present an unusual tradition in similar fashion. The Paduan manuscript
fragment, GB-Ob, contains a Benedicamus Domino with a mensural upper line over a liturgically
18 The hodge-podge nature of the works in A-Wn and the difference in scribal hands among those pieces
weakens this caveat somewhat for Ce jour le doibt.
A-GÖ (), D-BT (, ):
D-WIN (, ):
15
standard (harmonic) mode Benedicamus tenor. The top line is marked s[enaria] i[mprefecta] but is
better thought of as being in the first rhythmic mode. The lower voice is written entirely in long-
long mensural ligatures.
This work is in the same hand as, and shares a bifolio with Ciconia’s Sus une fontaine, one of the
most complex pieces of ars subtilior polyphony.
Similar to the Paduan Benedicamus is Paulus de Florentia’s Gaudeamus omnes in domnio.
The tenor of the piece is a standard (harmonic) mode chant. The tenor, which is spatially quite
separate from the cantus, must be interpreted entirely in breves despite the shapes of its ligatures,
that is, it must be considered non-mensural. At the same time, the upper voice shows a greater range
of rhythmic ingenuity than the Paduan example, incorporating syncopation and coloration rather
than remaining within a single rhythmic mode.19 Another work in a similar vein and also by Paulus
is the three voice Benedicamus Domino appearing in Pit (F-Pn).20 All three of these examples go
against our prevailing notion of Trecento sacred polyphony being essentially newly composed. Their
19 This example was also discussed in Kurt von Fischer, “Paolo da Firenze und der Codex Squarcialupi,”
Quadrivium (), pp. -. 20 The tenor of this piece was discussed in Willie Apel, The Notation of Polyphonic Music, -
(Cambridge, Mass.: The Medieval Academy of America, ), pp. -. The presence of such a work, complete with Italian divisiones letters, in what is normally thought of as one of the fundamental song repertories erodes the evidence for manuscript segregation. I have not conducted an exhaustive search for polyphony of this type. Others may exist.
16
florid upper voices also present a different strain of cross-over polyphony from the homophonic
mensural works examined in categories A-C above.
The remaining pieces all show different rhythmic or mensural quirks placing them outside
the mainstream of mensural music. The two Polish examples show an unusual variant of rhythmic
practice where there is no note value between a long L and a semibreve S. The German examples in
D-BT use two notes (LB or BB) presumably to show notes which are twice as long as the others.
The presence of a tail would therefore have no influence on rhythm.
Two Jube domne from the German manuscript, D-WIN, alternate between non-mensural
(though with some possible rhythmic interpretation) and mensural notation, as the example from
folio demonstrates:21
The Jube Domine from the fifteenth century Austrian manuscript, A-GÖ likewise begins
with a florid upper line over a sustained tenor. The tenor in that manuscript is written out with
identical breves in this piece and with identical longs in another piece from the same manuscript, In
21 GöllnerL, p. .
17
semper o pie. One breve or long is written for each note in the upper voice. These examples give
evidence, though certainly not conclusive, for an interpretation of equal note length, even for
currantes, in the upper parts of florid voices in late sources.
Nicolay Solemnia and the Rhythm of Cantus Planus Binatim
One melody of a Benedicamus trope for the feast of St. Nicholas, Nicolay Solemnia, is
preserved in three manuscripts, Cividale , St. Gall , and Berlin-Tübingen .22 Nicolay
Solemnia in the Cividale gradual is an example of cantus planus binatim and has been cited previously
by Gallo.23 The work appears in a manuscript containing twelve polyphonic pieces, none of which
are notated in a system preserving rhythmic information:
Nicolay Solemnia in the St. Gall manuscript is notated in a clear second rhythmic mode, which von
Fischer chooses to transcribe as long-breve with an upbeat:24
The St. Gall version of Nicolay cannot be taken as an isolated anomaly. The work is also transmitted
as second mode in the Berlin-Tübingen Ms. , with an added third voice and in a similar
22 I-CF, ff. v, r. CH-SGs , pp. , , D-BT , ff. v, r. 23 Gallo, p. . 24 FischerQ, p. .
18
notational style as the same manuscript’s Puer nobis nascitur (another St. Gall concordance) and In
natali domini, cited earlier. Both the St. Gall and the Berlin-Tübingen manuscripts date from the
middle of the fifteenth century, while Cividale originated near .
The presence of a work in both measured and unmeasured form coupled with evidence that
some scribes were totally unfamiliar with mensural notation might tempt us to conclude that all
polyphony was sung in measured rhythm, even if it is not written as such. Unfortunately, easy
answers elude us again. The case of two pieces from a Venetian manuscript, I-Vnm, will serve as a
demonstration.
The first work, the Benedicamus trope Verbum patris hodie (f. v), might seem a candidate
for a mensural interpretation of a rhythmically ambiguous piece. The music is written with two
voices on the same staff and with undifferentiated longs interspersed with the occasional non-
rhythmic breve or ligature. The accent pattern of the text might seem to imply mode , second ordo
rhythm: Verbum patris hodie procesit ex uirgine. Virtutes angelice cum canore iubilo. We might apply
this mensural interpretation secure in our belief that the scribe’s ability with mensural notation was
matched only by his skill in rhyming:
19
On the following page opening, however, the same scribe presents an entirely different view of
notational practice. The second work, Verbum caro factum est, uses a similar score layout, but longs,
breves, semibreves, minims, and mensural ligatures are all employed:
20
There are two obvious possibilities to explain this change in notational system. The first is
that the scribe has copied these two works out of different exemplars of quite different styles with no
knowledge of the musical content he was transmitting. This position conflicts with our growing
view of scribes as careful editors and music critics who commonly add more information to a work
than they omit.25 In Verbum caro, there are, however, several rhythmic oddities—semibreves against
breves and breve-breve ligatures better read as having opposite propriety. But, with one exception,
these errors occur at the beginning and ends of phrases, where even otherwise meticulous scribes in
totally mensural manuscripts tend to be careless. The idea of multiple exemplars also seems
25 See Margaret Bent, “Some Criteria for Establishing Relationships Between Sources of Late-Medieval
Polyphony,” in Music in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, edited by Iain Fenlon, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ), p. and John Nádas, “The Transmission of Trecento Secular Polyphony: Manuscript Production and Scribal Practices in Italy at the end of the Middle Ages,” (Ph.D. diss., New York University, ), passim.
21
increasingly unlikely as more cases of this nature are found. A careful examination of the manuscript
and scribal context of pieces of mensural polyphony is needed to accurately gauge the frequency with
which scribes transmit pieces in both mensural and non-mensural notation.
A second possibility emerges as more likely. The two pieces are representatives of different
polyphonic styles, and the notational differences between the two are not accidents of exemplar
transmission. This conclusion makes the work of transcription and manuscript examination more
difficult. For each piece transmitted in non-mensural form, it must be known whether the scribe
had knowledge of a method of notating the piece rhythmically. In the case of Verbum patris hodie,
the scribe did, and thus the non-mensural system seems deliberate. The version of Nycholay
sollempnia in Cividale answers this question far less clearly. Ten of the other polyphonic works in
the manuscript transmit no discernible rhythmic information. The notation of the remaining work,
Amor patris, might exhibit some rhythmic significance in the first two melismata but no
conventional mensural notation or variant thereof is being used. Thus, the scribe has not shown that
he has a grasp of rhythmic notation and we cannot say with any certainty that the works in Cividale
were intended to be performed in free rhythm rather than mensurally.
Remnants of a Homophonic Tradition in Mensural Music
Evidence of the influence of homophonic mensural polyphony is found in several pieces of
sacred art music from the late Trecento and early Quattrocento. Two Glorias by Antonius Zacara
da Teramo have openings which are very similar to the style of homophonic mensural mass
movements.26 An example of such a movement is the Credo from a Vatican Ms. (I-Rvat, ff. v,
r):27
26 The attribution of the second Gloria, from the Polish manuscript PL-Wn, to Zacara is uncertain,
though the similarity of the opening to the Gloria Micinella adds to the probability that he is the composer.
27 I have touched-up part of this facsimile to remove some show through.
22
This movement is perfectly homophonic for the first two lines of music and nearly perfect following.
The phrases have a tendency to use longer note values at the beginning and ends, and semibreves
and minims in the middle and before cadences.28 Some pieces of homophonic polyphony, such as
the first Credo of the Parma fragment, I-PAad, even accelerate from their opening longs, through
breves, to semibreves, and finally minims before allowing the notes to occur in other orders.
The Gloria Micinella of Zacara begins similarly homophonically and may be trying to recall
the same tradition. The opening is in two voices, almost a trademark of Zacara’s Glorias. The only
places which are not homophonic set MSM in the top voice against S S in the lower voice. This
substitution is quite common in homophonic mensural polyphony, as shown in A-Ssp and A-
Wn earlier:
Another Gloria by Zacara begins similarly:
28 This connects slightly to the Trecento style of having long melismas on the penultimate syllable of a phrase,
but unlike the secular styles, such as ballate or especially madrigals, the shorter note values begin several syllables before the cadence.
23
It might be noted that the only pieces where homophonic polyphony is recalled before
moving to more complex polyphony are mass Glorias. No known Credo begins like this. This
might be an indication that the two repertories existed alongside each other and that a composer like
Zacara, known for his musical trickery, might wish to deceive his listeners as long as possible about
what type of piece they are about to hear. Since the Gloria was the first mass movement which
seems to have been set polyphonically with frequency in fourteenth and early fifteenth-century
Italy—polyphonic Kyries were still rare at this time—it would be the most likely candidate for such
deceptively-homophonic treatment.
a a a
Lack of information about rhythmic practice is revealed not to be a problem when examining works
which fall between non-mensural note-against-note polyphony and the independence of voice of the
art traditions. Rather, as the Paduan processionals and the Venetian works Verbum patris and
Verbum caro showed, finding evidence which does not contradict other evidence is the difficulty.
Clearing up these contradictions of information is but one direction for future work on these
repertories. While this paper has attempted to situate the intermediate polyphony of the fourteenth
and early fifteenth centuries into the context of other polyphonic music of the period, a look at
similar music in earlier and later times would yield different, but also interesting, evidence. The
possible antecedents of the modal homophonic repertory in the conductus, whose survival into the
fourteenth-century can be seen in manuscripts such as the Roman de Fauvel, have yet to be explored.
Connections to other homophonic mensural repertories emerging during the fifteenth-century, such
as the polyphonic English carol, likewise have not been investigated. A look at the music of some of
24
the regions I could only hint at, especially in the east, is also needed to round out a picture of cross-
over polyphonic styles in the early fifteenth century. Finally, a return to the manuscript sources is
needed. The numbers and patterns of preservation of these works must be more fully known. The
idea of stylistic segregation of manuscripts must be systematically examined and possibly removed.
The reevaluation of the line between high and simple polyphony could greatly enhance our
understanding of the social, religious, and artistic roles of polyphonic music in the fourteenth and
early fifteenth centuries.
25
Manuscript Sigla
Austria A-GÖ Göttweig, Bibliothek des Benediktinerstifts, Ms. , c. A-Ssp Salzburg, Bibliothek des Benediktinerstifts St. Peter Ms. a IV , /c. A-Wn Wien, Österreichische Nazionalbibliothek Cod , -. A-Wn Wien, Österreichische Nazionalbibliothek Cod , c. [.] A-Wn Wien, Österreichische Nazionalbibliothek Cod , mid c. A-Wn Wien, Österreichische Nazionalbibliothek Cod , late c.
Switzerland CH-GsBh A Grand-Saint Bernard, Bibliothèque de l’Hospice, Ms. without shelfmark, / c. CH-GsBh B Grand-Saint Bernard, Bibliothèque de l’Hospice, Ms. without shelfmark, / c. CH-SGs St. Gallen Stiftsbibliothek Cod , mid c.
Czech Republic or Slovakia CS-S Sedlcany, Mestské museum na Cerveném Hrádku, Ms. M , c. CS-VB Vyšší Brod, Klašterní Knihovna, Ms. , c. [Dreves in Kirchenmusicalisches
Jahrbuch ()]
Germany D-Bs Berlin, Staatsbibliothek der Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Ms. theol. lat. ° ,
c. D-BT Berlin-Tübingen, Staatsbibliothek, Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Ms. germ. °
, c. D-WIN Winzenhofen, Pfarrarchiv, Ms. without shelfmark, late c. [GöllingerL; Irtenkauf,
Musikforschung ()]
France F-AM Amiens, Bibliothèque Municipale, ms. , late /early c. [...] F-Pn Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, Ms. fonds ital. (Pit), late / c. F-Pn Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, Ms. fonds nouv. acq. frç. (Reina), late / c.
[.]
Great Britian GB-Lbm London, British Museum (British Library), Ms. add. . / c. [.] GB-Ob Oxford, Bodleian Library, Ms. Can Pat. lat (PadA), late / c. [.] GB-OH Old Hall, Library of St. Edmund’s College, Ms. without shelfmark, / c. [..]
Italy
I-CF Cividale del Friuli, Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Cod. , c. [...] I-Fl Firenze, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Ms. Asbh. . -. [Gallo-Vecchi] I-FOL Foligno, Biblioteca Comunale, Frammenti musicali, c. [..., PirrotaC] I-GR Grottaferrata, Biblioteca dell’Abbazia, Collocazione provisoria , c.
26
I-Pc Padova, Biblioteca Capitolare, Ms. C. , / c. [Vecchi, Gallo-Vecchi] I-Pc Padova, Biblioteca Capitolare, Ms. C. , / c. [Vecchi, Gallo-Vecchi] I-Pu Padova, Biblioteca Universitaria, Ms. , PadB, /c. [..] I-Pu Padova, Biblioteca Universitaria, Ms. , PadA, /c. [..] I-PAad Parma, Archivio della Fabbrica del Duomo, Ms. F-, c. [Gallo-Vecchi, Fischer-
Gallo, Massera, Aurea Parma [Ital .]] I-PIca Pisa, Biblioteca Cateriniana del Seminario Arcivescovile, Ms. . / c. I-Sc Siena, Biblioteca Comunale, Ms. H. I. . / c. [Fischer-Gallo] I-Vnm Venezia, Biblioteca Nazionale di S. Marco, Cod. italiano IX . / c.? [Gallo-
Vecchi]
Poland PL-Kb Kraków, Biblioteka Klasztoru OO. Bernardynów, Ms. /RL. / c. PL-Kklar Kraków, Biblioteka Klasztoru SS. Klarysek (S. Andrea), Ms. . c. . [MGG ,
“Polen”, Tf ]
United States US-Cn Chicago, The Newberry Library, Ms. (olim ), / c. [Hughes, Acta
Musicologica , Fischer-Gallo]
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